1:35:04
You couldn't
have prevented
1:35:06
your brother's
death, Your Majesty.
1:35:09
Send my armies north.
1:35:11
If Burma wants this war,
they shall have it.
1:35:23
Lord Bradley?
1:35:24
Lady Bradley.
Mr. Kincaid.
1:35:26
If l might have
a moment of your time.
1:35:28
I'm afraid, Mrs. Leonowens,
a moment is all we have.
1:35:30
We are leaving
on the next boat, my dear,
1:35:32
and so should you.
1:35:33
My life is here,
Lady Bradley.
1:35:36
Kincaid: Nasty business.
1:35:37
All this sabre-rattling.
1:35:40
Not good for trade,
I can tell you.
1:35:43
But the king's brother
is most likely dead,
1:35:45
as is his general.
1:35:47
I would hardly call
his action unprovoked.
1:35:50
What can I do for you,
Mrs. Leonowens?
1:35:54
Are the British behind
these attacks on Siam?
1:35:57
Kincaid: Puh!
1:35:58
Stick to teaching,
Mrs. Leonowens.
1:36:01
It's obvious you know
nothing about politics.
1:36:03
Burma would
not make a move
1:36:05
without England's blessing,
that I know.
1:36:07
Precisely.
1:36:10
But if this crisis
isn't resolved soon,
1:36:13
and a country
under our protection
1:36:14
is threatened,
1:36:16
we will have no choice
but to defend our interests.
1:36:21
Our protection?
1:36:22
Our interests?
1:36:24
The ways of England
1:36:25
are the ways of
the world, my dear.
1:36:27
They are the ways
of one world, Lady Bradley,
1:36:31
one that I ashamed
to call my own.
1:36:33
You forget
yourself, madam.
1:36:34
Now, ifyou'll
excuse us.
1:36:36
No, I will not.
1:36:39
You raised
your glass to him.
1:36:40
You commended him
for his vision,
1:36:43
and all the while
you were waiting
1:36:44
to take his country
from him.
1:36:46
How the empire
conducts its business
1:36:48
is really
none of your concern.
1:36:51
Last time I inquired,
Lord Bradley,
1:36:54
I was still
a British subject.
1:36:55
A fact you would do well
to remember, madam,
1:36:57
next time you're cheek
to cheek with the king.